Liddaton Halt was a railway station opened in 1938 by the Great Western Railway to serve the hamlet of Liddaton that lies between Coryton and Lydford in West Devon, England.
The halt was opened at a later date than most of the stations on the line from Plymouth to Launceston which had itself opened in 1865. The single platform's original construction was an open wooden structure with a small wood built shelter, one oil lamp and a single platform name board. An overbridge lay at the Coryton end of the platform. The track was single with no passing loop or sidings.

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In 3J miles from Tavistock, the former station (and now halt) of Marytavy &
Blackdown is reached. The Launceston & South Devon Railway constructed the
road to the station in 1865 from the moorland village of Marytavy, on the far side
of the ... In three miles it reaches Liddaton Halt. built in 1937 in response to
requests ...

A dedicated history of one of the more neglected stations on the Great Western Railway. Newbury West Fields Halt is no more. There is little left on the ground to show where this railway station once stood. It stood just west of the Berkshire town of Newbury and served commuters from the housing estates in the area. Some of the older residents can ...